Sixty-four-year-old former American soldier Betty Ann Archer finally flew to New Delhi to complete her gender transition.
Former soldier Betty Ann Archer finally flew to New Delhi to complete her gender transition after decades of battling depression, one of a growing number of foreigners heading to India for budget sex-change operations. Born Dale Archer, the 64-year-old American said she felt trapped in the wrong body right from the start, recalling secretly trying on her mother's dresses as a boy -- much to the horror of her conservative military father. "I attempted to kill myself twice. I didn't like myself. I didn't like my body at all. I couldn't be myself," said Archer, who is from Arizona.
‘A growing number of foreigners are heading to India for budget sex-change operations and the number of surgeries are increasing day by day.’
"I became very ill in 2011 and almost died," she said, wearing a bright blue sari and ornate Indian jewellery that she bought after her gender reassignment surgery in Delhi. "While I was recovering I came to the conclusion that I had to transition or die." A small but steadily increasing number of transgenders are travelling to socially conservative India for such procedures, which are cheaper than those in their homelands and with no waiting lists, according to industry experts. Some are even choosing India, which has traditionally shunned its own transgender community, over leading sex-change destination Thailand which is regarded as more accepting on this issue.
In November, Archer found herself at the Olmec Centre nestled in a northern Delhi neighbourhood, which she picked over clinics in Thailand which she felt were "just a bit too expensive". "This is affordable. This is an option that some transgender people can look at and not have to kill themselves because they can't afford it," said Archer, who paid about $6,000, a fifth of the price back home, and said India's conservative views on transgenders had not been an issue when deciding to come.
- Shopping trips -
For up to $22,000, Olmec provides the treatment, but also accommodation, airport shuttles and post-operative care that includes shopping trips and visits to the Taj Mahal and other tourist favourites. Olmec founder and plastic surgeon Narendra Kaushik said he operates on up to 200 mostly local patients a year.
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The government is actively promoting India's booming medical tourism industry, including by recently overhauling a special M-visa, now issued faster and valid for one year. The $3 billion industry is expected to more than double in size by 2020, a report published last year from the Confederation of Indian Industry says. More than 250,000 patients -- seeking everything from hip replacements to facelifts -- are travelling to India annually, according to US-based consulting firm Patients Beyond Borders.
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Woodman said, however, some foreigners might question India as a destination given that its own transgender community is vulnerable to discrimination. Known as "hijras", India several million transgenders are often outcasts. Shunned from society some end up destitute forced to beg or into prostitution.
- 'Wanted the best' -
Retired British violinist Rosy Mica Kellett decided to travel to India for male-to-female surgery based on glowing recommendations for her surgeon. It was also 14,000 pounds ($20,000) -- less than half the cost in the UK. "It's significantly cheaper here than it is back home and in most countries, even including Thailand," said the married 50-year-old during a recent follow-up appointment with Kaushik.
"Some of the feedback I received for this kind of procedure in Thailand didn't seem to be as super advanced as my surgeon performs," said Kellett, formerly known as Michael, dressed in a flowing maxi dress. "I wanted the very best and I got the very best."
Indian surgeons are also developing their own techniques for transgender operations, including for female-to-male surgeries, which are complex and less widely available, according to industry experts. But Shobha Mishra Ghosh, senior director of Indian industry body FICCI, said policymakers need to work harder if India was to become a top destination.
She suggested further streamlining of visa and immigration processes, as well as help desks at airports and more language interpreters. "If we can bring the entire ecosystem in place, a lot of traffic that is going to other countries will get diverted to us," Ghosh said. "In that sense, I think we have a winner out there."
Source-AFP